What are ionic and covalent bonds??
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This is concerning.
An ionic bond is formed when one atom effectively gives another one some of it's electrons. The most simple case is sodium chloride (table salt), NaCl. In this case, Na has an electron configuration of 2,8,1 whereas Cl has an electron configuration of 2,8,7
An atom will always seek to complete it's outer shell, or discard it. So here, the sodium atom donates that 1 electron in it's valence shell to the chlorine atom.
The sodium atom lost an electron, so now it becomes the sodium ion - [Na+]
The chlorine atom gained an electron, so now it becomes the chloride ion - [Cl-]
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A covalent bond is formed when atoms start sharing electrons between each other. In effect, this electron that has been shared is now capable of orbiting both atoms in question. The most simple case is water, H2O, where the elements existing are oxygen (electron config. 2, 6) and hydrogen (electron config 1.)
Oxygen and hydrogen both seek to fill it's outer shell (valence shell). Hence, oxygen and hydrogen will each share one electron with one another, thereby forming a covalent bond. The overall result is that two electrons are orbiting both H, AND O.
Because oxygen technically requires two electrons, it will form a covalent bond with two hydrogen molecules. This allows oxygen to also fill it's outer shell. (Note that hydrogen only requires one)
Covalent network bonding??? Whatt
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On the contrary I can understand if this is nonsensical at the start.
In a covalent network, we are once again interested in covalent bonding.
To illustrate a covalent network, we will consider carbon, which has electron configuration 2,4.
Carbon technically needs FOUR electrons to fill it's outer shell. One way of doing this, is to just form two covalent bonds with oxygen molecules. But that's not gonna make a covalent network.
Another way, is just to share all 4 electrons with another carbon atom. But that, will be exhaustive.
Instead, what carbon does is that it will interact with FOUR OTHER carbons.
Two carbon atoms will each share one electron with each other. However, what will happen is that every carbon shares an electron with four other carbons. Because this allows carbon to gain all 4 other electrons, it also completes it's outer shell.
But, ALL the carbons in the lattice will do this; not just that one carbon. So because you have one carbon forming covalent bonds with four other carbons, AND SO ON, we have a covalent network